Wednesday 28 March 2012

Yale Silk Road Database



About the Yale Silk Road Database

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Project Summary

Maijishan Caves, Tianshui, Gansu Province, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2006: June 27 – August 5 (Northern and Southern Routes), Copyright Mimi Hall Yiengpruksawan. All rights reserved.The Silk Road, as an interconnected web of trade routes linking the ancient societies of Asia with those of the Subcontinent and the Near East, has contributed to the development of most of the world's great civilizations. The Yale Silk Road Database presents over 11,000 images of major sites in the Silk Road region taken during faculty site seminars led by Mimi Hall Yiengpruksawan (Professor, History of Art) under the auspices of the Council on East Asian Studies at Yale University in the summers of 2006-2010. Photographs included in this collection were taken during faculty site seminars in Gansu, Ningxia, and Xinjiang Provinces in 2006, seminars in Sichuan and Yunnan during the summer of 2007, visits to Liao Dynasty sites in Shanxi, Liaoning, Hebei, and Inner Mongolia during the summer of 2008, a program along the Tarim Basin and in northern Xinjiang during the summer of 2009, and a program for educators in Gansu, Qinghai, Sichuan, and Tibet Extension during the summer of 2010.
The collection serves as a multi-disciplinary resource with relevance to students and faculty working in the fields of art and archaeology, religious studies, history, East Asian languages and literatures, Central Asian and Islamic studies. The Yale Silk Road Database is sponsored by the Council on East Asian Studies' Silk Road Studies Project through major funding awarded to the Council's National Resource Center Title VI Grant from the United States Department of Education. 
Permission to publish any image from this collection in print or on the Web is granted at the discretion of the relevant copyright holder and requests may be forwarded to the Council on East Asian Studies, Yale University.  Site technical questions and comments may be e-mailed to the Visual Resources Collection, Yale University.

Selection of Images
Kashgar Old City, Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2009: June 22 – July 14 (Xinjiang Seminar),© Abbey Newman. All rights reserved.
Kashgar Old City, Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2009,  ©Abbey Newman.
Labrang Monastery, Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Xiahe County, Gansu Province, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2009: June 22 – July 14 (Xinjiang Seminar), © Abbey Newman. All rights reserved.
Labrang Monastery, Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Gansu Province, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2009, © Abbey Newman.
People's Plaza, Kashgar (Kaxgar), Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2009: June 22 – July 14 (Xinjiang Seminar), Copyright Abbey Newman. All rights reserved.People's Plaza, Kashgar (Kaxgar), Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2009, © Abbey Newman.
Yanqi Ancient City, Bayingholin Mongol Autonomous Prefecture, Yanqi Hui Autonomous County, Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2006: June 27 – August 5 (Northern and Southern Routes), Copyright Mimi Hall Yiengpruksawan. All rights reserved.
Yanqi Ancient City, Bayingholin Mongol Autonomous Prefecture,  Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2006, © Mimi Hall Yiengpruksawan.
Abakh Khoja Tomb, Kashgar (Kaxgar), Haohan Village (Ayziret), Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2009: June 22 – July 14 (Xinjiang Seminar), Copyright Abbey Newman. All rights reserved.
Abakh Khoja Tomb, Kashgar (Kaxgar), Haohan Village (Ayziret), Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2009, © Abbey Newman.
Huashan (Shaanxi Province), Yale Silk Road Seminar 2008: June 4 – June 22 (Liao Seminar), Copyright Mimi Hall Yiengpruksawan. All rights reserved.
Huashan, Shaanxi Province, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2008, © Mimi Hall Yiengpruksawan.
Binglingsi Caves, Lanzhou Prefecture, Gansu Province, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2006: June 27 – August 5 (Northern and Southern Routes), Copyright Mimi Hall Yiengpruksawan. All rights reserved.
Binglingsi Caves, Lanzhou Prefecture, Gansu Province, Yale Silk Road Seminar 2006, © Mimi Hall Yiengpruksawan.



From : Yale Daily News March 28, 2012

Database on East Asia adds photos

BY SHARON YIN
A Yale University Library database containing photographs taken by Yale faculty and staff in East Asia roughly doubled in size last month.
The Silk Road Database, which has been available since the summer of 2010 and is funded by the U.S. Department of Education Title VI grant for the Council of East Asian Studies, recently acquired an additional 5,400 images to total over 11,000 photographs taken by Yale faculty and staff participating in faculty site seminars in East Asia. History of art professor Mimi Yiengpruksawan, who leads site seminars and initially amassed photos for the project, said roughly 20 professors have contacted her about using the images for their research, adding that many people "just like looking at the pictures."
"These are images taken while traveling to remote areas, and I think there is a lot of information that can be helpful in our understanding of contemporary lifeways in China," she said.
Carolyn Caizzi, an instructional design specialist in the Visual Resources Collection of the Yale Arts Library who oversees the database, said the update allows users to find images more relevant to their research.
She said she developed the idea for the project after she visited historic sites in China, such as caves with "amazing" paintings, and decided that she wanted her colleagues to be able to share her experiences. Yiengpruksawan, who said she took roughly 3,000 of the photographs herself, called the process of taking photos and building the database "one of the most intellectually stimulating" projects in her career.
Ingrid Yeung GRD '15, who helps catalogue the additional images in the updated collection, said she thinks the enhanced collection will have a "significant impact" on researchers because of its unique content.
"There is nothing out there, printed or online, that provides this amount of high-quality material," she said. "Nothing beats going there by yourself, but the photographs give you a close approximation of the experience."
Unlike many of the library's resources, the database can be accessed by anyone, as there is no log-in required. Yiengpruksawan said she emphasized "outreach" as one of her primary goals when she initially proposed the project; she said she wanted to make the photos available to the "academic community at large," instead of only researchers at Yale.
Yiengpruksawan added that it is important for Yale researchers to have access to research materials that are not widely available, such as those from Xinjiang and Tibet.
"We forget, sometimes, that there are worlds of culture that have been eclipsed by various governments for political and other reasons," she said. "We had a golden opportunity over the past decade to travel to places that prompt us to ask questions about our assumptions."
The Yale Visual Resources Collection has a total of 300,000 images.

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